In other words, when confronting enemy artillery, the AL-100A falls short due to its insufficient range, making it disadvantaged, unable to gain the upper hand in a gun battle.
The deadly issue is that the AL-100A is a towed artillery piece with almost zero tactical mobility.
Although the Empire's Army requested the AL-100A to have limited tactical mobility during its design, such as equipping it with an independent walking unit that could reposition during combat to reduce reliance on towing equipment and personnel, this requirement was ultimately abandoned for weight reduction purposes. Instead, a small engine was proposed to drive the ammunition loading device.
Once deployed, the AL-100A can only rely on personnel or light vehicles for towing mobility.
Clearly, this is not in line with the pace of modern warfare.
Even in an ideal state, transitioning the AL-100A from deployment to action requires six gunners to toil for ten minutes, plus vehicular towing.
